Election of 1880 By 1880, the
Republican Party of the United States was divided into two factions based on their views of the
patronage system. The
Stalwarts sought to preserve the system, while the
Half-Breeds supported
James G. Blaine's efforts at
civil service reform. At the
1880 Republican National Convention, Blaine was the front-runner for the presidential nomination from the Half-Breed faction, while the Stalwarts sought a third term for
Ulysses S. Grant. The two parties remained deadlocked until the 34th ballot, at which point the delegation from Wisconsin united behind
James A. Garfield, an Ohio congressman who was supporting
John Sherman for the presidency. Two ballots later, Garfield won the Republican nomination with 399 votes. Seeking to appease the Stalwarts, Garfield selected
Chester A. Arthur as his
running mate. Arthur was viewed as the Stalwarts' second-in-command to New York Senator
Roscoe Conkling, and he had previously run the
New York Custom House until he was removed by
Rutherford B. Hayes for enabling bribery and corruption within the office. The choice of Arthur proved controversial among both party factions: the Half-Breeds mistrusted Arthur, who had spurned Conkling and the other Stalwarts by accepting the nomination. Conkling had attempted to persuade Arthur to "contemputously decline" the nomination, arguing that Garfield's loss was a foregone conclusion, to which Arthur replied that even a "barren nomination" would be "a great honor". On the other side of the party,
Edwin Lawrence Godkin reassured readers of
The Nation that "there is no place in which [Arthur's] powers of mischief will be so small as in the Vice Presidency". Some Republicans asked if it would be possible to split their ballot so that they may vote for Garfield but not Arthur. Garfield defended his running mate against the accusations of corruption, telling Sherman, "he had not been dishonest, just inefficient". Voter turnout for the
1880 United States presidential election was high, with 78 percent of eligible voters participating. Garfield defeated
Winfield Scott Hancock by a 214–155
electoral college vote. He won the popular vote by a margin of only 7,368 votes, at the time the narrowest margin of victory for any United States president-elect, and many of his electoral votes came by narrow margins. Garfield took New York by less than two percent of the vote. If New York's 35 electoral votes had gone to Hancock, he would have won the presidency.
Garfield's assassination , Garfield's assassin On March 5, 1881,
Charles J. Guiteau traveled to Washington, D.C., to petition Garfield for a political office. Guiteau, who is believed to have suffered from either
syphilis or
schizophrenia that impacted his mental capacities, believed that he was entitled to a diplomatic position for his
stump speech in favor of Garfield. He was repeatedly turned away by those through whom he attempted to get an appointment with Garfield, but Arthur took some pity on him, and Guiteau believed that they had a friendship. On May 18, two days after Conkling resigned from his Senate seat, Guiteau decided to assassinate Garfield, believing that God was telling him that "If the President was out of the way every thing would go better". Guiteau purchased a .44 caliber
British Bull Dog revolver, a knife, and a box of cartridges on June 6, and he practiced his shooting on the edge of the
Potomac River. He spent the following month stalking Garfield, first hoping to shoot him at church before deciding on the
Baltimore and Potomac Railroad Station, where Garfield and his wife would board the train to their New Jersey home. At about 9:30 a.m. ET on the morning of July 2, 1881, Guiteau fired two shots at Garfield, who was accompanied by Blaine at the Baltimore and Potomac station. He was arrested almost immediately after opening fire and told the officers who captured him, "I did it. I will go to jail for it. I am a Stalwart and Arthur will be President." While sitting in the District Jail, Guiteau continued to insist to police that he was personal friends with Arthur, and that he would be rewarded for his assassination of Garfield.
New York City Police Commissioner Stephen French feared that the American public would connect Arthur to Guiteau and attempt violence against him. As such, he stationed several police officers and detectives at the
Fifth Avenue Hotel where Arthur was staying. Arthur initially avoided traveling to the capital lest he be seen as too eager to assume the presidency, but when Garfield remained alive by 11 p.m., he decided to take a late train into the capital.
The 80-day crisis Most Americans, including Arthur, believed that Garfield would die quickly after the shooting.
William Henry Harrison (in 1841) and
Zachary Taylor (in 1850) were indisposed for a matter of days before succumbing to their respective illnesses, while
Abraham Lincoln (in 1865) had died only hours after his assassination 16 years prior. Instead, Garfield became the first president to lie incapacitated for an extended period of time, alive but physically and mentally weak. His lingering recovery period complicated the Constitutional crisis begun by Harrison. The most that Article Two had addressed an ill or injured president was in the clause "inability to discharge the powers and duties of his office", which did not entirely apply to Garfield, whose lucidity waxed and waned throughout his recovery process. Another confounding factor was the general public's dislike of Arthur. Garfield's assassination attempt was met with dread as newspapers and politicians realized that his death would result in Arthur's ascension to the presidency. Animosity towards Arthur rose as Garfield's condition deteriorated and abated when he appeared to head towards recovery. Arthur was additionally loath to appear too eager to assume the duties of the presidency, lest he be accused of usurpation. He withdrew from public life, afraid of the death threats that he received and of the theory that he was complicit in the president's assassination. Per political scientist
Jared Cohen and historian
Candice Millard, Arthur had never wanted the presidency, and he saw the vice presidency as his ultimate goal. It came with the prestige of an elite office but not the intense responsibilities that the president faced. Absent any active executive leadership, the United States ran into political and economic upheaval. A
Supreme Court vacancy remained unfilled, while the investigation into the
Star Route scandal stalled. Foreign affairs broadly required attention, and the
stock market, always in some state of flux, demonstrated a downward trend. This lack of federal leadership was exacerbated by the fact that Congress had gone into recess in March and was not called to reconvene until December. Blaine was the first to suggest that Article Two allowed the cabinet to name Arthur acting president while Garfield was incapacitated, an opinion which Arthur himself refused. Garfield's cabinet proposed three courses of action for how to handle the president's long recovery period. Under the first option, they could take advantage of Congress's long recess and allow the incapacitated president to retain his power. Second, they could delegate rather than devolve executive power, through which Garfield would carry out his duties through a selected member of his cabinet. Finally, they proposed that Congress pass an act providing for the "temporary discharge of presidential duties during the president's inability", which would be difficult to do during a recess period. The cabinet ultimately chose not to take any drastic action, taking the chance that nothing of immediate urgency would occur. == Inauguration ==